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1.
Retin Cases Brief Rep ; 14(2): 166-169, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29176538

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To report the novel application of nontreponemal and treponemal antibody to confirm diagnosis of ocular syphilis from vitreous samples. METHODS: Two distinct case reports emphasizing the importance of confirmatory vitreous treponemal antibody. Multimodal imaging of patients was also applied. RESULTS: We report two distinct cases with positive serum treponemal antibody but opposing vitreous treponemal antibody results. One case with a positive vitreous test responded well to antisyphilitic treatment. By contrast, a case with a negative vitreous result was changed to serpiginous choroiditis, eventually cured by immunomodulatory treatment. CONCLUSION: Intraocular fluid analysis of nontreponemal and treponemal antibody may play an important role in ruling out suspected ocular syphilis in settings without a polymerase chain reaction facility, especially immunocompromised patients who are at risk of multiple infections. Further studies are needed to establish the sensitivity and specificity of nontreponemal and treponemal antibody test on vitreous samples.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Bacterial/immunology , Chorioretinitis/parasitology , Eye Infections, Bacterial/parasitology , Syphilis/parasitology , Treponema/immunology , Adult , Chorioretinitis/diagnosis , Choroid/pathology , Diagnosis, Differential , Eye Infections, Bacterial/diagnosis , Fluorescein Angiography , Fundus Oculi , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retina/pathology , Syphilis/diagnosis , Tomography, Optical Coherence
2.
Sci Adv ; 5(12): eaaw9724, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31840059

ABSTRACT

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are ubiquitous within wild animal populations, yet it remains largely unknown whether animals evolved behavioral avoidance mechanisms in response to STI acquisition. We investigated the mating behavior of a wild population of olive baboons (Papio anubis) infected by the bacterium Treponema pallidum. This pathogen causes highly conspicuous genital ulcerations in males and females, which signal infectious individuals. We analyzed data on 876 mating attempts and associated acceptance or rejection responses in a group of about 170 baboons. Our findings indicate that females are more likely to avoid copulation if either the mating partner or females themselves have ulcerated genitals. We suggest that this outcome is linked to the overall higher choosiness and infection-risk susceptibility typically exhibited by females. Our results show that selection pressures imposed by pathogens induce individual behavioral modifications, leading to altered mate choice and could reduce promiscuity in a wild nonhuman primate population.


Subject(s)
Sexual Behavior, Animal/physiology , Syphilis/parasitology , Treponema pallidum/physiology , Animals , Female , Genitalia, Female/parasitology , Genitalia, Female/pathology , Male , Models, Biological , Papio anubis , Ulcer/parasitology , Ulcer/pathology
3.
J Clin Lab Anal ; 30(5): 628-32, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26892231

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Laboratory diagnosis of neurosyphilis is complicated especially when it is asymptomatic, no single laboratory test result being appropriate to diagnose central nervous system infectivity caused by Treponema pallidum. Our objective was to evaluate two polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques for the detection of T. pallidum DNA in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with syphilis. METHODS: One hundred twenty-four CSF samples from patients with reactive blood tests for syphilis were obtained. Two PCR techniques (47-PCR, polA-PCR) were used to detect T. pallidum DNA. The laboratory criteria used for the diagnosis of neurosyphilis to which the PCR techniques were compared were those recommended by the IUSTI: 2008 European guidelines on the management of syphilis. RESULTS: Treponema pallidum DNA was detected amplified in 37 of 124 (29.8%) and 30 of 124 (24.2%) samples with the 47-PCR and polA-PCR, respectively. Sensitivities were 75.8% and 69.7% and specificities 86.8% and 92.3%, respectively, for 47-PCR and polA-PCR techniques, respectively. The three CSF samples of patients with primary syphilis did not fulfill the criteria of neurosyphilis and DNA was only detected in one by the 47-PCR. In samples from secondary syphilis and neurosyphilis, three of nine and nine of nine respectively, results were coincident for the two PCR techniques and neurosyphilis criteria. Major discrepancies between the two PCR techniques and neurosyphilis diagnostic criteria were observed in latent syphilis. CONCLUSION: Beyond some limitations of the study, which are discussed here, both PCR techniques seem to be useful for the diagnosis of neurosyphilis, although 47-PCR presents a higher sensitivity and polA-PCR a higher specificity.


Subject(s)
DNA, Protozoan/cerebrospinal fluid , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Treponema pallidum/isolation & purification , Adult , Humans , Sensitivity and Specificity , Syphilis/cerebrospinal fluid , Syphilis/parasitology , Treponema pallidum/genetics
4.
PLoS One ; 8(9): e74319, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24058545

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Treponema pallidum ssp. pallidum (TPA), the causative agent of syphilis, is a highly clonal bacterium showing minimal genetic variability in the genome sequence of individual strains. Nevertheless, genetically characterized syphilis strains can be clearly divided into two groups, Nichols-like strains and SS14-like strains. TPA Nichols and SS14 strains were completely sequenced in 1998 and 2008, respectively. Since publication of their complete genome sequences, a number of sequencing errors in each genome have been reported. Therefore, we have resequenced TPA Nichols and SS14 strains using next-generation sequencing techniques. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The genomes of TPA strains Nichols and SS14 were resequenced using the 454 and Illumina sequencing methods that have a combined average coverage higher than 90x. In the TPA strain Nichols genome, 134 errors were identified (25 substitutions and 109 indels), and 102 of them affected protein sequences. In the TPA SS14 genome, a total of 191 errors were identified (85 substitutions and 106 indels) and 136 of them affected protein sequences. A set of new intrastrain heterogenic regions in the TPA SS14 genome were identified including the tprD gene, where both tprD and tprD2 alleles were found. The resequenced genomes of both TPA Nichols and SS14 strains clustered more closely with related strains (i.e. strains belonging to same syphilis treponeme subcluster). At the same time, groups of Nichols-like and SS14-like strains were found to be more distantly related. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: We identified errors in 11.5% of all annotated genes and, after correction, we found a significant impact on the predicted proteomes of both Nichols and SS14 strains. Corrections of these errors resulted in protein elongations, truncations, fusions and indels in more than 11% of all annotated proteins. Moreover, it became more evident that syphilis is caused by treponemes belonging to two separate genetic subclusters.


Subject(s)
Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Syphilis/genetics , Syphilis/parasitology , Treponema pallidum/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Genetic Variation , Genome/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Sequence Alignment
5.
Adv Parasitol ; 81: 223-55, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23384625

ABSTRACT

From the early 1920s until the advent of penicillin in the mid 1940s, a clinical course of malaria was the only effective treatment of general paresis, a common manifestation of tertiary syphilis that was nearly always fatal. For a number of reasons, Plasmodium vivax became the parasite species most often employed for what became known as malariotherapy. This provided an opportunity, probably unique in the annals of medicine, to observe and investigate the biology, immunology and clinical evolution of a dangerous human pathogen in its natural host. There is little doubt that the lessons learned from these studies influenced the malaria research and control agendas. It is equally true that over the last 40 years, the insights afforded by malariotherapy have remained largely undisturbed on the dusty shelves of institutional libraries. In this chapter, we broadly review the published data derived from malariotherapy, and discuss its relevance to current challenges of P. vivax epidemiology, immunology and pathology.


Subject(s)
Malaria, Vivax , Plasmodium vivax/immunology , Syphilis/parasitology , Syphilis/therapy , Adaptive Immunity , Animals , History, 20th Century , Humans , Malaria/parasitology , Malaria/pathology , Malaria/transmission , Malaria, Vivax/immunology , Malaria, Vivax/microbiology , Malaria, Vivax/parasitology , Malaria, Vivax/transmission , Plasmodium/classification , Syphilis/history
6.
Vox Sang ; 49(6): 390-9, 1985.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3911575

ABSTRACT

The hypothesis that experimentally determined survival times of Treponema pallidum in stored donor blood could be related to the number of treponemes initially present in the treponeme-blood mixtures was investigated by inoculating rabbits with three graded doses of treponemes suspended in donor blood and stored at 4 degrees C for various periods of time. The storage periods up to which living treponemes could be detected in the testes of the inoculated rabbits as well as those storage periods up to which seroconversion occurred are related to the number of treponemes present in the treponeme-blood mixtures. Increasing numbers of treponemes present in the donor blood resulted in longer periods up to which positive results in both parameters were found. All available evidence suggests that the upper limit of seroconversion coincides with the upper limit of treponemal survival. Inoculation with 5 X 10(4) treponemes per ml of donor blood resulted in a treponemal survival time of 48 h, inoculation with 1.25 X 10(6) treponemes per ml in a treponemal survival time of 72 h and inoculation with 2.5 X 10(7) treponemes per ml donor blood in a survival time of 120 h.


Subject(s)
Blood/parasitology , Syphilis/transmission , Transfusion Reaction , Treponema pallidum/isolation & purification , Animals , Antibody Formation , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Male , Orchitis/etiology , Rabbits , Syphilis/blood , Syphilis/parasitology , Time Factors , Treponema pallidum/immunology
7.
Sucre; s.n; rev; jun.1926. 56 p.
Thesis in Spanish | LIBOCS, LIBOSP | ID: biblio-1306273

ABSTRACT

1.La sifilis es la causa más frecuente de la iritis 2.Es una afeccion ocular que se presenta en el segundo periodo de la avariosis raramente en el terciario,3.-En nuestro medio el 65 por ciento de las iritis son especificas como cifra minima,4.-Casi nunca ataca los dos ojos simultaneamente,5.-La forma mas frecuente es la plastica,6.-El cuerpo ciliar participa de la inflamacion la mayor parte de la veces,7.-La formacion de sinequias es la regla sino se instituye un tratamiento racional desde un principio,8.-En todo caso de iritis sospechosa se hara el tratamiento especifico,9.-La atropina es la base del tratamiento local,10.-La medicacion mixta arsenomercurial es la de eleccion excepto en la forma gomosa en la que el yuduro de potasio da mejores resutados,11.-El pronostico es siempre grave con ligeras variantes según la forma clinica,12.-La iritis no siempre indica una forma grave de la lúes


Subject(s)
Male , Female , Humans , Syphilis/classification , Syphilis/microbiology , Syphilis/parasitology , Syphilis/rehabilitation
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